by shrimper » Fri Oct 17, 2008 9:29 am
Certain information will, quite rightly, remain confidential at this time. But, as Posh says, it appears (from the confidence the board displays) that the deal for the sale of Christie Park is secure. I get the impression that whoever they've been dealing with may be agreeing to buy it in full knowledge that it might not be the right time, just yet, to develop it for housing. But it WILL be in a few years and the land will still represent a great development opportunity then.
The board, I'd imagine, do have the resources (or access to them via financial arrangements) to pay for the new ground themselves. But they've never wanted to work like that. They HAVE invested lots of their own money but this whole deal is aimed at making the club more able to stand on its own two feet in the future and not rely so much on that kind of funding - we've all seen what happens when a 'sugar daddy' decides he's had enough. Not saying our chaps would ever ditch us but anything can happen with individuals and they want to eliminate such risks.
The sale of Christie Park will bring in one lump of cash, I'd imagine applications will be made to the Football Trust and other bodies. There is also, I suppose, some prospect of cash under regeneration budgets for that area of town.
Loans will be arranged as well (maybe from board members to the club; maybe from banks, the club borrowing against the budgeted income from the rents from, say, a new hotel and fast food outlets).
The land at Westgate isn't being given to the club, they do have to buy it but it won't be at the same price as the land at Christie. The council wants to encourage this development because it thinks it's a good idea for the town. The Christie site is a more obvious 'infill' area for residential development.
I don't think there is a definite cost of the new ground. The board has said 'multi-million'. There will be a basic price for a minimum level of facilities that they want to incorporate but when the club assesses precisely what funds are available, after it's paid out all its agency fees and plans are firmed up, it'll decide how much it can spend.
Is the glass half full or half empty? Mmmm? hard to say - but it does look like there's room for more beer!